The 627 hectares comprising the Menzel Centennial Provincial Nature Reserve accommodates a variety of habitats ... alvars, wooded areas, marshes, open and treed fens. Plants considered to be fen indicator species are represented, it's reputed to be a refuge to the uncommon Juniper Hairstreak (Callophrys gryneus), and I'm sure I saw a female Ocellated Emerald on a recent visit (but, alas, didn't get a picture of it). And the Menzel Centennial Provincial Nature Reserve is where I found a couple of Wood Fern species that are not at all rare, but are new to me because as far as I know they aren't found closer to home.
The stipe of this fern is chaffy, but other fern species can have scaly stems so this attribute alone isn't good enough to identify our unknown plant. It's tough to get good pictures in constantly changing dappled lighting and only one other photo was worth keeping, sori to say (was that a bad pun, or what?).
The Intermediate Wood Fern, also known as the Evergreen Wood Fern or Fancy Fern, is very similar to and often confused with the Spinulose Wood Fern (Dryopteris carthusiana). However, in the Spinulose Wood Fern the lowest pinnae nearest the stipe are much longer than the remaining pinnae, in the Intermediate Wood Fern the corresponding innermost pinnae are shorter, and the second set out from the stipe are the longest.